Let the people do what they want, you get Woodstock. Let the government do 
what it wants, you get WACO!....Mary.











http://www.dailytim es.com.pk/ default.asp? page=2008% 5C09%5C13% 5Cstory_13- 
9-2008_pg7_ 67
 
US firm ambushed in Afghanistan, 23 killed
 
KABUL: At least 23 people were killed when Taliban ambushed a United States 
security firm convoy in southwestern Afghanistan on Friday. Provincial 
officials said it was the second attack on the firm in recent days. Provincial 
Police Chief Khalilullah Rahmani said 15 of the dead were Taliban killed in the 
fighting that broke out following the ambush. 

Rahmani said US Protection and Investigations, a firm involved in escorting 
supplies for coalition forces, also suffered casualties, but gave no details. 
“The Taliban attacked the convoy with machineguns. Four vehicles were set on 
fire,” said a provincial official requesting anonymity. He said four Afghan 
guards and four civilians had been killed in the ambush that took place when 
the convoy was passing through Bakwa district in Farah province. Another convoy 
of the security firm had been attacked on Thursday in Kandahar city. Two people 
had been killed in the attack. In another incident, the US military said 
coalition forces had killed more than 10 Taliban and had detained two more 
during operations in eastern Afghanistan targeting the network of Taliban 
commander Jalaluddin Haqqani. 

Two members of Haqqani’s team were picked up in Khost province, including one 
suspected of co-ordinating roadside attacks on coalition and Afghan forces, the 
US military said in a statement. Haqqani, who was backed by the United States 
during the war against the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, is considered close 
to Osama Bin Laden.

The military said US forces had also targeted a Taliban commander in Kapisa 
province, northeast of Kabul, adding that 10 militants had been killed in the 
fighting. “Coalition forces were engaged with small-arms fire from multiple 
groups of armed militants as they entered a compound. The force returned fire, 
killing the militants,” said the statement. 

Afghan police have arrested three men alleged to have provided international 
troops with ‘incorrect information’ that led to airstrikes said to have killed 
more than 90 civilians. 

The three were on a list of people provided to President Hamid Karzai by locals 
who alleged they had misinformed troops ahead of the August 22 strikes, the 
head of police intelligence in the western province of Herat told reporters. 
“We arrested three people who were on the list. The operation is continuing to 
arrest the others,” said Mohammad Musa Rasouli. The interior ministry also 
announced the arrests of three men in a statement. Karzai visited Shindand 
district on September 4 and met with people who lost relatives in the strikes. 
He promised to arrest anyone whose ‘false information’ might have guided the 
attack, said an aide.

Afghan and UN rights investigations say more than 90 civilians had been killed 
in the strike, many of them children. The US military however, says that 
between five and seven civilians had been killed along with 30-35 Taliban, 
including an important commander. agencies 














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